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Incredible things are happening in China
(hexbear.net)
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This is funny but it's a bit concerning to read "Xi Jinping thought on culture" seems to mean attempting to merge Marxism and Confucianism based on the title of the TV show
I read something about Marxism and Confuscianism a while back and I think they started trying to merge them in the 80s
Wasn't the 1980s but even further back in the 1920s. This TV show in the screenshot is actually an essay written in 1925 by a Chinese socialist thinker and this meme of China claiming Marx was Chinese is an out of context mistranslation.
A commenter on a post where this was posted earlier pointed out that Diderot and other enlightenment thinkers admired Qing China's civil service, and that these thinkers (being part of a "radical" rather than mostly angloamerican "liberal" intellectual tradition), would influence Kant, Hegel, Marx and Engels.
To add to what you've said, the classical economists can ultimately trace their economic theory back to Confucius via the physiocrats. The chain is Confucius -> Confucians during the early Han dynasty -> Francois Quesnay -> Adam Smith -> David Ricardo -> Karl Marx. Also, laissez-faire is just the physiocrats translating and applying wuwei to state involvement in economics. Wuwei, however, has far more application than laissez-faire and means different things depending on the Chinese school of philosophy (Confucian, Daoist, Legalist).
Also, laissez-faire is just the physiocrats translating and applying wuwei to state involvement in economics
This is kind of interesting
Because Laissez-faire vs State intervention was already a debate in Ancient Chinese empires.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discourses_on_Salt_and_Iron
To the point of Daoism, it is kind of interesting that the ideology basically involved into Mohism, Legalism and Confucianism with the latter basically just out right copy the 2 formers. The case of Daoism fusing with Legalism (a kind of totalistic ideology) basically created Foucault's Panopticon
I'm pretty sure Enlightened Absolutism in the ""enlightened Era'''' is partly based on or hasardly coincident with the idealized ruler in Mohism and Confucianism